Of the many once-impossible things that have happened in the weeks since allegations of sexual abuse against Harvey Weinstein went public, this may be the strangest: a legal document detailing a lawsuit between Harvey Weinstein, plaintiff, and the Weinstein Company, defendant.

Fresh from a weeklong stint in rehab for sex addiction and still pursuing efforts to clear his name, Weinstein is suing the company he co-founded, according to Variety, to obtain access to the e-mail account and personnel file he used while serving as the company’s CEO. As the suit states, “Mr. Weinstein believes that his email account—which is the primary, if not only, account he used during the term of his employment by the Company—will contain information exonerating him, and therefore the Company, from claims that may be asserted against him or the Company.” This is the second suit to hit the Weinstein Company in two days; on Wednesday, actress Dominique Huett filed a $5 million civil suit against the Weinstein Company board, claiming that it “had actual knowledge of Weinstein’s repeated acts of sexual misconduct with women” even before the first New York Times report brought the allegations into the mainstream.

Weinstein has maintained since the sexual harassment and assault allegations first went public that he believed all of the sexual encounters were consensual. What, exactly, will exonerate him in his personnel files and e-mail accounts remains unclear.